Los Angeles Times The Supreme Court may be poised to require states to subsidize religious schools if they provide financial support for other private schools, poking another hole in the “wall of separation between church and state” described by Thomas Jefferson as central to the First Amendment. On Wednesday, the…
Airmont: Federal judge refuses to dismiss Hasidic Jewish school’s discrimination lawsuit
The main building of United Talmudical Academy of Monsey on Cherry Lane in the Village of Airmont on Thursday, November 29, 2018. (Photo: John Meore/The Journal News) AIRMONT — A federal judge has found sufficient grounds for a trial on discrimination claims against the village concerning the expansion of a…
Editorial: The Supreme Court may poke another hole in the ‘wall of separation’ between church and state
Justice Elena Kagan noted that states could oppose funding religious schools for reasons that have nothing to do with bigotry. The Supreme Court may be poised to require states to subsidize religious schools if they provide financial support for other private schools, poking another hole in the “wall of separation…
Supreme Court hears oral arguments on major religious school choice case
A general view of the U.S. Supreme Court building in Washington. Photo by Duncan Lock/Creative Commons (RNS) — The U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments on Wednesday (Jan. 22) for a case that may put to rest decades of debate over government funding for private, religious schools. The case, Espinoza…
Eric Smith: First Amendment protects work and finances of religious charities
The Washington Post’s exclusive story on David Nielsen’s whistleblower complaint to the IRS with respect to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints “saving its excess surplus donations instead of using them for charitable works” deserves a more technical explanation of the law surrounding tax-exempt organizations. First, let’s establish…
Supreme Court should protect religious liberty by guarding against government funding of religion
On Jan. 22, the United States Supreme Court will hear arguments in a landmark case that could widen the door for state voucher programs and seriously damage religious liberty. In Espinoza v. Montana Department of Revenue , the court is being asked to hold that the Free Exercise Clause requires…
Religion and school choice at heart of new Supreme Court battle
The battle over school-choice programs and state aid for religious schools returns to the U.S. Supreme Court this week as three mothers from Montana ask the justices to uphold a scholarship program that would help fund Christian education for their children. The case is a major test for the balance…
Supreme Court takes up church-state separation in Christian schools case
The Supreme Court takes up the sensitive issue of religion in public life Wednesday, considering whether states violate the Constitution if they prevent religious groups from receiving some state benefits. The justices are asked to strike a balance between the desire of a state to keep government out of religion…
Trump administration’s religious freedom announcements square with Constitution, Supreme Court precedent
Trump administration’s religious freedom announcements square with Constitution, Supreme Court precedent Government is not permitted to treat people of faith as second-class citizens. But for far too long public schools and many other government institutions have willfully curtailed religious actions by private individuals in government buildings and grounds. President Trump…
Oregon Fined Them $135k For Quoting A Bible Verse. They’re Fighting Back.
Did Oregon officials violate their duty to remain neutral on matters of religion when they ordered Christian bakers Aaron and Melissa Klein to pay $135,000 for declining to create a custom same-sex wedding cake, a move that crushed the small, family-owned business? That’s the question that the Oregon Court of…
Supreme Court to Consider Limits on Contraception Coverage
Ruth Fremson/The New York Times WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court agreed on Friday to decide whether the Trump administration may allow employers to limit women’s access to free birth control under the Affordable Care Act. The case returns the court to a key battleground in the culture wars, but one…
Virginia couple wins battle to hold Bible study at retirement center: settlement
A man reading the Bible. | Getty images/stock photo A Virginia couple who were threatened with eviction from their retirement home if they continued to hold Bible study meetings have won the right to hold classes again. Kenneth and Liv Hauge recently reached a settlement with the Evergreens at Smith…
Appeals court hears oral argument on religious school funding dispute in Maine
The 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals heard argument earlier this month in yet another funding case that explores the limits of the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Trinity Lutheran . In that case, the Court held that under the First Amendment a church could not be denied access to…
Public scholarships for private religious schools
More than half of the Notre Dame incoming class in 2019 did not attend public high school. Catholic high schools, specifically, accounted for 37% of that class. This month, the Supreme Court of the United States will hear argument as to whether it is unconstitutional for a state to…
Christian Bakers Challenge $135K Fine for Quoting Bible Verse
Keisha Russell Keisha Russell is counsel to First Liberty Institute, a non-profit law firm dedicated to defending religious freedom for all. Did Oregon officials violate their duty to remain neutral on matters of religion when they ordered Christian bakers Aaron and Melissa Klein to pay $135,000 for declining to create…
Gov. Whitmer, GOP clash on Michigan ban on public funds for private schools
Religious and non-public school groups in late December asked the Michigan Supreme Court to strike down the 1970 state constitutional amendment prohibiting taxpayer funding for private schools, arguing it was motivated by anti-Catholic bias and violates the free exercise clause of the U.S. Constitution. (Shutterstock photo) LANSING – What began…
Families argue in appeal that Maine should pay tuition at religious schools
Three families arguing the state should pay tuition for their children to attend private religious schools because they live in school districts with no high schools made their case before a federal appeals court in Boston on Wednesday. Angela and Troy Nelson pose in August 2018 with their children, Royce,…
Espinoza School Choice Case and Discrimination Against Religion
When I moderated a debate on Espinoza v. Montana Dep’t of Revenue , I had a question for one of the Institute for Justice lawyers who represents Ms. Espinoza (and others, including Linda Greenhouse, had asked the same question as well). Here’s the issue: A Montana school choice programs let…
Column: Evangelicals should thank Trump for protecting their religious liberty
In this Dec. 18 photo, President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign rally in Battle Creek, Mich. Using stark “Us versus Them” language, Trump and his campaign are trying to frame impeachment not as judgment on his conduct but as a culture war referendum on him and his supporters, aiming…
’Trump judges’ are important for religious freedoms
Evangelicals who minimize the importance of President Donald Trump’s judicial appointments betray a naivete about the perils to religious liberty in the United States, perils that have been growing over the past decade. Many people, outside of the relatively small group of constitutional law professors and Supreme Court and appeals…
Hugh Hewitt: Evangelicals should thank Trump for protecting their religious liberty
Evangelicals who minimize the importance of President Donald Trump’s judicial appointments betray a naivete about the perils to religious liberty in the United States, perils that have been growing over the past decade. Many people, outside of the relatively small group of constitutional law professors and Supreme Court and appeals…
Evangelicals should thank Trump for protecting their religious liberty
Demonstrators rally outside the Supreme Court on Dec. 5, 2017, when it heard the case of a Colorado baker who refused to make a cake for a same-sex wedding. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images) Evangelicals who minimize the importance of President Trump’s judicial appointments betray a naivete about the perils to religious…
Liberal officials invent sham ‘anti-gay discrimination’ to take down Texas Christian judge
A Texas judge may get her day in court after she was sanctioned for refusing to perform same-sex marriages. McLennan County Judge Dianne Hensley recused herself from performing same-sex marriages in accordance with her Christian faith. In an affront to religious liberty, the Texas State Commission on Judicial Conduct investigated…
Texas judge who refused to marry gay couples sues commission that sanctioned her
Dianne Hensley, a judge in Waco, Texas, is suing the state agency that gave her a public warning last month for refusing to officiate same-sex weddings while continuing to officiate heterosexual ones. The lawsuit, filed Monday, claims the State Commission on Judicial Conduct’s warning violates Hensley’s rights under the Texas…
Supreme Court will decide if religious freedom shields Catholic schools from teacher suits
The Supreme Court agreed Wednesday to hear two California cases on whether teachers at religious schools may sue for alleged discrimination. WASHINGTON — In 2014, Kristen Biel told her principal at St. James Catholic School in Torrance that she had breast cancer and would need time off for chemotherapy. The…